Yorkshire Post

IN A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN

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IN THE 22 years since rugby league entered a brave new era funded with £87m of Sky money and grand ambitions to take the game out of the M62 corridor and transform it into a continenta­l competitio­n, the sport has gone through plenty of ups and downs, along with numerous further attempts at reinventio­n.

But there appears to be a growing prospect that rugby league may be heading for its biggest transforma­tion since the advent of Super League back in 1996 – which involved a switch to summer matches and the introducti­on of teams in London and Paris – as the Hearn family, who have overhauled darts, snooker and boxing, consider doing the same for another sport.

Rumours have been circulatin­g for some time about the prospect of their company Matchroom becoming involved in rugby league and in early January, Feathersto­ne Rovers chairman Mark Campbell called for the Rugby Football League (RFL) to appoint Barry Hearn as the game’s new chief executive. “I believe Barry Hearn could achieve great things with our sport,” he said. “He has done so already in darts, boxing and snooker and we boast – in my view – the best spectator sport on the planet. The thought of him and his people running our game makes me hugely excited.”

But the potential for them getting involved gained fresh momentum when Barry’s son Eddie told online boxing channel iFL TV a couple of weeks later that the game was currently “in the wrong hands” and Matchroom could make a greater success of it. “People sometimes look at sports that are struggling and think we can walk in and give it the ‘Matchroom touch’, which is a little bit of magic sprinkle that really revolution­ises and turns sport around,” he said.

“We have done it in snooker, we have done it in darts of course and we have done it in boxing. People in the rugby league infrastruc­ture look at us and see we have got an unbelievab­le relationsh­ip with Sky, we have turned around sports that have been flat. Could we do it in rugby league? Yeah. I believe I can do it in all sports. Maybe that is just me being arrogant. Rugby league is a great sport, rugby league has a huge fanbase. It is just in the wrong hands, that’s all. The world has changed, the way that you promote sport has changed completely. Anybody that hasn’t embraced the new age is finished.”

Interim RFL chief executive Ralph Rimmer said in response that the sport was “open to ideas” and would “never say never” to the idea of Matchroom becoming involved. A brief examinatio­n of Matchroom’s history and their ability to turn niche sports into major television attraction­s makes clear their potential appeal to rugby league bosses. The company has been a major player in British sport since the 1970s when Barry Hearn went from being a chartered accountant to becoming the manager of aspiring snooker profession­al Steve Davis.

By the 1980s, Matchroom managed most of snooker’s biggest stars as it became one of the most popular sports on television and, in recent years, Eddie Hearn has helped increase its global reach with new tournament­s launched around the world.

Eddie Hearn now manages the country’s most successful boxers including Anthony Joshua, Amir Khan and Kell Brook, while Matchroom’s involvemen­t in darts has seen the sport sell out arenas across the country and prize money rocket for players.

But the idea of Matchroom becoming involved has not received a universal welcome, with critics pointing out their previous successes have related to individual rather than team sports and raising concerns about whether they would be interested in developing the game at a grassroots level.

Phil Caplan, a Leeds-based rugby league writer and broadcaste­r, says there are mixed opinions on the Hearns but a general acceptance that more could be done to promote the game to new fans and revitalise a sport which now produces few household names.

The first game of the Super League in 1996 saw Paris St Germain beat Sheffield Eagles in front of 18,000 fans in France and there was ambitious talk of eventually establishi­ng sides in places like Madrid and Barcelona. But with Paris St Germain folding after two seasons and London Broncos relegated from Super League in 2014 after financial struggles, Perpignan’s Catalans Dragons are now the only club in the top division from outside northern England.

However, defenders of the Super League point to the way it has modernised the game, with clubs playing in new stadiums and the pioneering use of video referees now widely copied by other sports. Canadian side Toronto Wolfpack are now playing within the British system and aiming for promotion to the Super League, while there are hopes a New York side could follow in their footsteps next year. The sport’s latest television deal with Sky, running until 2021, is reported to have been worth £200m.

But Caplan says there is scope for improvemen­t and believes there could be a way forward that suits all parties; giving Matchroom responsibi­lity for enhancing and promoting individual events in the calendar like the World Club Challenge involving matches against Australian sides and the Magic Weekend, which sees an entire round of Super League matches all played at the same stadium.

“Look at what they have done with the crowds at the darts, the snooker, even the table tennis. They have a track record of appealing to the more neutral sports fan. You go to the darts and it is an event. People will pay £100 for a night out and you don’t have to have a strong allegiance to the sport. You want to be part of something – that is what rugby league more than anything desperatel­y needs. All the people who know the sport absolutely love it; it is getting it out to more people.

“Having got to a World Cup final and very nearly won it a couple of months ago, rugby league didn’t capitalise on that. Everybody knew when England won the Rugby Union World Cup who Jonny Wilkinson was. Very few people could name the England Rugby League players. We are a sport which is still lacking in making the most of our greatest asset, which is the players.”

But Sheffield Eagles coach Mark Aston, whose side play in the Championsh­ip, one level below Super League, says the game’s issues go much deeper than needing to better promote the larger matches. The Eagles were forced to scrap their reserve team structure in 2016 after missing out on official academy status from the RFL.

“The big events are the icing on the cake. You need to start looking at the fundamenta­l problems of the game or it won’t matter about the icing on the cake if the ingredient­s have gone off. The underlying issue isn’t Eddie Hearn. Coming up with some ideas on how to develop the sport at grassroots level is what we should be talking about. The game needs somebody to come in and take it by the scruff of the neck.”

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 ??  ?? Over 70,000 people watched the 2017 Grand Final – but Eddie Hearn, inset, believes more can be done to promote rugby league.
Over 70,000 people watched the 2017 Grand Final – but Eddie Hearn, inset, believes more can be done to promote rugby league.
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